1 ;;; vcursor.el --- manipulate an alternative ("virtual") cursor
3 ;; Copyright (C) 1994, 1996, 1998, 2001-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5 ;; Author: Peter Stephenson <pws@ibmth.df.unipi.it>
7 ;; Keywords: virtual cursor, convenience
9 ;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
11 ;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
12 ;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
13 ;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
14 ;; (at your option) any later version.
16 ;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
17 ;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
18 ;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
19 ;; GNU General Public License for more details.
21 ;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
22 ;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
29 ;; - *IMPORTANT* vcursor-key-bindings is now nil by default, to avoid
30 ;; side-effects when the package is loaded. This means no keys are
31 ;; bound by default. Use customize to change it to t to restore
32 ;; the old behavior. (If you do it by hand in .emacs, it
33 ;; must come before vcursor is loaded.)
34 ;; - You can alter the main variables and the vcursor face via
35 ;; M-x customize: go to the Editing group and find Vcursor.
36 ;; - vcursor-auto-disable can now be 'copy (actually any value not nil
37 ;; or t), which means that copying from the vcursor will be turned
38 ;; off after any operation not involving the vcursor, but the
39 ;; vcursor itself will be left alone.
40 ;; - works on dumb terminals with Emacs 19.29 and later
41 ;; - new keymap vcursor-map for binding to a prefix key
42 ;; - vcursor-compare-windows substantially improved
43 ;; - vcursor-execute-{key,command} much better about using the
44 ;; right keymaps and arranging for the correct windows to be used
45 ;; - vcursor-window-funcall can call functions interactively
46 ;; - vcursor-interpret-input for special effects
51 ;; Virtual cursor commands. I got this idea from the old BBC micro.
52 ;; You need Emacs 19 or 20 and a window system for the best effects.
53 ;; For character terminals, at least Emacs 19.29 is required
54 ;; (special behavior for the overlay property
55 ;; "before-string" must be implemented). Search for "dumb terminals"
56 ;; for more information.
58 ;; This is much easier to use than the instructions are to read.
59 ;; First, you need to let vcursor define some keys: setting
60 ;; vcursor-key-bindings to t before loading, or by customize, will
61 ;; define various keys with the prefix C-S. You'll have to read
62 ;; further if you don't want this. Then I suggest you simply load it
63 ;; and play around with holding down Ctrl and Shift and pressing up,
64 ;; down, left, right, tab, return, and see what happens. (Find a
65 ;; scratch buffer before using C-S-tab: that toggles copying.)
67 ;; Most of the functions described in this documentation are in
68 ;; parentheses so that if you have the package loaded you can type C-h
69 ;; f on top of them for help.
71 ;; Using the cursor keys with both control and shift held down moves
72 ;; around a virtual cursor, which is initially at point. When active,
73 ;; it appears with an underline through it to distinguish it from the
74 ;; normal cursor. You can then use one of the other commands to copy
75 ;; characters from the location of the virtual cursor to point. This
76 ;; is very useful, for example, when copying some previous text while
77 ;; making changes to it at the same time, since you never have to move
78 ;; the "real" cursor away from where you are inserting.
80 ;; The remaining default key bindings are based around the PC-type
81 ;; cluster found above the cursor keys on a lot of keyboards, the
82 ;; function keys which my limited knowledge of X terminals expects to
83 ;; find at the top. Some functions are duplicated in more obvious
84 ;; places for the X version.
86 ;; All the keybindings require you to hold down control and shift at
87 ;; once. I assumed this combination wouldn't be heavily bound by most
88 ;; people and that it would be easy to type with the left hand.
89 ;; Inevitably it will clash with some other packages, but I can't help
90 ;; that: an intuitive binding is a prerequisite here. See below for
91 ;; other alternatives (search for "Oemacs"). There is also a keymap
92 ;; which you can bind to a prefix key, which may give some more
93 ;; intuitive alternatives in some cases, see `The vcursor keymap' below.
95 ;; Holding down control and shift and pressing insert (vcursor-copy)
96 ;; copies one character from wherever the virtual cursor is to point;
97 ;; point and the virtual cursor advance in the separate and equal
98 ;; station to which... (etc.). M-C-S-return (vcursor-copy-line)
99 ;; copies to the end of the line instead of just one character,
100 ;; C-S-delete or C-S-remove (vcursor-copy-word) copies a word.
102 ;; A more general way of copying is to use C-S-tab, which is a toggle.
103 ;; In the "on" state, moving the virtual cursor will copy the
104 ;; moved-over text to the normal cursor position (including when going
105 ;; backwards, though each piece of text moved over is copied forwards:
106 ;; compare the behavior of C-S-up and C-S-left).
108 ;; However, that's just a small part of the magic. If the virtual
109 ;; cursor goes off the display, it will be redisplayed in some other
110 ;; window. (See the function (vcursor-find-window) for details of how
111 ;; this window is chosen.) This gives you fingertip control over two
114 ;; C-S-return (vcursor-disable) disables the virtual cursor, removing
115 ;; it so that it starts from point whenever you move it again --- note
116 ;; that simply moving the cursor and virtual cursor on top of one
117 ;; another does not have this effect.
119 ;; If you give C-S-return a positive prefix arg, it will also delete the
120 ;; window (unless it's the current one). Whenever the virtual cursor
121 ;; goes off-screen in its own window, point in that window is moved as
122 ;; well to restore it to view. (It's easier that way, that's why.
123 ;; However, point doesn't move unless the view in the window does, so
124 ;; it's not tied to the virtual cursor location.)
126 ;; You can also use C-S-return with a negative prefix argument which
127 ;; forces the vcursor to appear at point. This is particularly useful if
128 ;; you actually want to edit in another window but would like to
129 ;; remember the current cursor location for examining or copying from
130 ;; that buffer. (I just hit C-S-right C-S-left, but I'm a hopeless
133 ;; There is also C-S-f6 (vcursor-other-window) which behaves like
134 ;; C-x o on the virtual rather than the real cursor, except that it
135 ;; will create another window if necessary.
137 ;; The keys C-S-prior (vcursor-scroll-down) and C-S-next
138 ;; (vcursor-scroll-up) (i.e., PageUp and PageDown) will scroll the
139 ;; virtual cursor window, appropriately chosen. They will always
140 ;; create a new window or take over an old one if necessary.
141 ;; Likewise, M-C-S-left and M-C-S-right move you to the
142 ;; beginning or end of a line, C-S-home and C-S-end the
143 ;; beginning or end of a buffer (these are also on M-C-S-up and
144 ;; M-C-S-down for those of us stuck with DEC keyboards).
146 ;; C-S-f7 (vcursor-goto) will take you to the vcursor position
147 ;; (swapping windows if it seems sensible) and (unless you give it a
148 ;; prefix argument) delete the virtual cursor, so this is useful for
149 ;; you to take over editing at the virtual cursor position. It is not
150 ;; an error if the virtual cursor is not active; it simply leaves you
151 ;; at point, because that is where the virtual cursor would start
154 ;; In a similar vein, M-C-S-tab (hope your left hand's flexible;
155 ;; C-S-select on DEC keyboards) (vcursor-swap-point) will take you to
156 ;; the virtual cursor position but simultaneously put the virtual
157 ;; cursor at the old cursor position. It is also supposed to ensure
158 ;; that both are visible.
160 ;; C-S-f8 (C-S-find on DEC keyboards) (vcursor-isearch-forward)
161 ;; allows you to do an isearch in another window. It works a bit like
162 ;; vcursor-scroll-*; it moves into another window, calls isearch
163 ;; there, and sets the virtual cursor position to the point found. In
164 ;; other words, it works just like isearch but with the virtual cursor
165 ;; instead of the real one (that's why it's called a "virtual
166 ;; cursor"). While you are isearching, you are editing in the virtual
167 ;; cursor window, but when you have finished you return to where you
168 ;; started. Note that once you are in isearch all the keys are normal
169 ;; --- use C-s, not C-S-f8, to search for the next occurrence.
171 ;; If you set the variable vcursor-auto-disable, then any command
172 ;; which does not involve moving or copying from the virtual cursor
173 ;; causes the virtual cursor to be disabled. If you set it to non-nil
174 ;; but not t, then the vcursor itself will remain active, but copying
175 ;; will be turned off, so that the next time the vcursor is moved no
176 ;; text is copied over. Experience shows that this setting is
177 ;; particularly useful. If you don't intend to use this, you can
178 ;; comment out the `add-hook' line at the bottom of this file. (This
179 ;; feature partially emulates the way the "copy" key on the BBC micro
180 ;; worked; actually, the copy cursor was homed when you hit return.
181 ;; This was in keeping with the line-by-line way of entering BASIC,
182 ;; but is less appropriate here.)
184 ;; vcursor-compare-windows is now a reliable adaption of
185 ;; compare-windows, which compares between point in the current buffer
186 ;; and the vcursor location in the other one. It is an error if
187 ;; vcursor is not set, however it will be brought up in another window
188 ;; if it is not currently visible. The prefix argument acts just like
189 ;; compare-windows, ignoring whitespace if set. (In versions before
190 ;; 1.6, this simply called compare-windows, which was much less likely
191 ;; to pick the two windows you wanted.)
193 ;; There is a way of moving the virtual cursor using ordinary
194 ;; commands: C-S-f9 (vcursor-execute-key) reads a key string,
195 ;; moves to the virtual cursor position, executes the command bound to
196 ;; the string, then returns to the original point. Thus C-S-f9 M-m
197 ;; moves the virtual cursor back to the first non-whitespace character
198 ;; on its line. As the command is called interactively all the usual
199 ;; ways of passing information to the command called, such as by a
200 ;; prefix argument, are available. This has many uses not necessarily
201 ;; related to moving the vcursor itself; it can do essentially
202 ;; everything that the \C-x 4 series of commands can do and a lot
203 ;; more. Note, however, that a new window is not used if the vcursor
204 ;; is visible in the current one: this can lead to some strange effects,
205 ;; but it is preferable to making a new window every time the vcursor
206 ;; is moved in this may.
208 ;; C-S-f10 (C-S-x) (vcursor-execute-command) behaves the same way but
209 ;; you enter the name of the command. To do anything really
210 ;; complicated, you are better off using M-C-S-tab
211 ;; (vcursor-swap-point), doing whatever it is, then calling M-C-S-tab
214 ;; If you want to add your own moving or copying functions you should
215 ;; be able to do this fairly easily with (vcursor-relative-move) and
216 ;; (vcursor-copy) together with (vcursor-get-char-count). If you want to
217 ;; do something in a different window, use (vcursor-window-funcall).
222 ;; There is an alternative set of key bindings which will be used
223 ;; automatically for a PC if Oemacs is detected. This set uses separate
224 ;; control, shift and meta keys with function keys 1 to 10. In
225 ;; particular, movement keys are concentrated on f5 to f8 with (in
226 ;; increasing order of distance traveled) C-, M- and S- as prefixes.
227 ;; See the actual bindings below (search for C-f1). This is because the
228 ;; C-S- prefix is represented by weird key sequences and the set is
229 ;; incomplete; if you don't mind that, some hints are given in comments
232 ;; You can specify the usual or the Oemacs bindings by setting the
233 ;; variable vcursor-key-bindings to `xterm' or `oemacs'. You can also set
234 ;; it to nil, in which case vcursor will not make any key bindings
235 ;; and you can define your own. The default is t, which makes vcursor
236 ;; guess (it will use xterm unless it thinks Oemacs is running). The
237 ;; oemacs set will work on an X terminal with function keys, but the
238 ;; xterm set will not work under Oemacs.
240 ;; Usage on dumb terminals
241 ;; =======================
243 ;; If Emacs has set the variable window-system to nil, vcursor will
244 ;; assume that overlays cannot be displayed in a different face,
245 ;; and will instead use a string (the variable vcursor-string, by
246 ;; default "**>") to show its position. This was first implemented
247 ;; in Emacs 19.29. Unlike the old-fashioned overlay arrow (as used
248 ;; by debuggers), this appears between existing text, which can
249 ;; make it hard to read if you're not used to it. (This seemed the
250 ;; better option here.) This means moving the vcursor up and down is
251 ;; a very efficient way of locating it!
253 ;; Everything else should function as expected, but there is no way to
254 ;; get an easy key binding for the vcursor keys on a generic terminal.
255 ;; Consequently a special keymap is defined for you to use traditional
256 ;; methods: the keymap, however, is available on any terminal type.
258 ;; The vcursor keymap
259 ;; ==================
261 ;; In addition to any other bindings, vcursor-map contains key definitions
262 ;; for handling the vcursor. You should assign this to a prefix key
263 ;; in the usual way, e.g.
264 ;; (global-set-key [f14] vcursor-map)
265 ;; and also as usual \C-h in this map will list the key definitions, which
266 ;; are designed to be easy to remember.
268 ;; A special feature is provided by (vcursor-use-vcursor-map), bound
269 ;; to t in that keymap. With this in effect, the main keymap
270 ;; is overridden by the vcursor map, so keys like \C-p and so on
271 ;; move the vcursor instead. Remember how to turn it off (type t),
272 ;; or you are in serious trouble! Note that the cursor keys are not
273 ;; bound by default in this keymap and will continue to move the
279 ;; Just occasionally, you may want to pretend the strings copied from
280 ;; the vcursor position are to be interpreted as if you had typed them
281 ;; from the keyboard. Normally, they will just insert themselves anyway,
282 ;; but in some modes (Info and calc for example) typing ordinary characters
283 ;; does something else. To get this effect, set
284 ;; vcursor-interpret-input to t. This is normally not a good idea as
285 ;; interpreting input is very much slower than copying text.
290 ;; - The vcursor will not move to point-max, since otherwise it would
291 ;; disappear. However, no error is flagged as point-max is a valid
292 ;; point in the buffer. Thus cursor right or down at the second
293 ;; last point in the file does not flag an error, which is inconsistent,
294 ;; and if copying is on the last character (typically newline) will
295 ;; be repeatedly copied. (I've tried making it flag an error
296 ;; instead and that's worse since often the vcursor is sent to
297 ;; point in some other window, which may be point-max.)
298 ;; - The vcursor widens when over a tab character or right at the
299 ;; end of the line. You're welcome to consider this a feature;
300 ;; it's just a part of how overlays work.
301 ;; - The vcursor obscures the real cursor. Creative use of overlays
303 ;; - The vcursor does not remember its own previous positions. If
304 ;; you cycle it back into a window it was in before, it will be at
305 ;; point in that window. Often, that is where a previous recenter
306 ;; left point, not where the vcursor was before.
307 ;; (Note, however, that the vcursor does remember where it *is*,
308 ;; even if it's off-screen. This can also lead to surprises, but I
309 ;; don't think it's a bug.)
310 ;; - vcursor-window-funcall could perhaps be smarter about restoring
311 ;; the previous window state on failure.
312 ;; - The logic in vcursor-find-window is rather complicated and
313 ;; therefore bug-prone, though in practice it seems to work OK.
315 ;; Possible enhancements:
316 ;; It would be easy to implement vcursor-push (save vcursor position
317 ;; as mark and deactivate) and vcursor-pop (deactivate vcursor and
318 ;; move to last pushed position) functions.
322 (eval-when-compile (require 'compare-w
))
324 (defgroup vcursor nil
325 "Manipulate an alternative (\"virtual\") cursor."
330 '((((class color
)) (:foreground
"blue" :background
"cyan" :underline t
))
331 (t (:inverse-video t
:underline t
)))
332 "Face for the virtual cursor."
335 (defcustom vcursor-auto-disable nil
336 "If non-nil, disable the virtual cursor after use.
337 Any non-vcursor command will force `vcursor-disable' to be called.
338 If non-nil but not t, just make sure copying is toggled off, but don't
339 disable the vcursor."
340 :type
'(choice (const t
) (const nil
) (const copy
))
343 (defcustom vcursor-modifiers
(list 'control
'shift
)
344 "A list of modifiers that are used to define vcursor key bindings."
345 :type
'(repeat symbol
)
348 ;; Needed for defcustom, must be up here
349 (defun vcursor-cs-binding (base &optional meta
)
350 (vector (let ((key (append vcursor-modifiers
(list (intern base
)))))
355 (defun vcursor-bind-keys (var value
)
356 "Alter the value of the variable VAR to VALUE, binding keys as required.
357 VAR is usually `vcursor-key-bindings'. Normally this function is called
358 on loading vcursor and from the customize package."
361 ((not value
));; don't set any key bindings
362 ((or (eq value
'oemacs
)
363 (and (eq value t
) (fboundp 'oemacs-version
)))
364 (global-set-key [C-f1
] 'vcursor-toggle-copy
)
365 (global-set-key [C-f2
] 'vcursor-copy
)
366 (global-set-key [C-f3
] 'vcursor-copy-word
)
367 (global-set-key [C-f4
] 'vcursor-copy-line
)
369 (global-set-key [S-f1
] 'vcursor-disable
)
370 (global-set-key [S-f2
] 'vcursor-other-window
)
371 (global-set-key [S-f3
] 'vcursor-goto
)
372 (global-set-key [S-f4
] 'vcursor-swap-point
)
374 (global-set-key [C-f5
] 'vcursor-backward-char
)
375 (global-set-key [C-f6
] 'vcursor-previous-line
)
376 (global-set-key [C-f7
] 'vcursor-next-line
)
377 (global-set-key [C-f8
] 'vcursor-forward-char
)
379 (global-set-key [M-f5
] 'vcursor-beginning-of-line
)
380 (global-set-key [M-f6
] 'vcursor-backward-word
)
381 (global-set-key [M-f6
] 'vcursor-forward-word
)
382 (global-set-key [M-f8
] 'vcursor-end-of-line
)
384 (global-set-key [S-f5
] 'vcursor-beginning-of-buffer
)
385 (global-set-key [S-f6
] 'vcursor-scroll-down
)
386 (global-set-key [S-f7
] 'vcursor-scroll-up
)
387 (global-set-key [S-f8
] 'vcursor-end-of-buffer
)
389 (global-set-key [C-f9
] 'vcursor-isearch-forward
)
391 (global-set-key [S-f9
] 'vcursor-execute-key
)
392 (global-set-key [S-f10
] 'vcursor-execute-command
)
394 ;;; Partial dictionary of Oemacs key sequences for you to roll your own,
395 ;;; e.g C-S-up: (global-set-key "\M-[\C-f\M-\C-m" 'vcursor-previous-line)
397 ;;; "\M-[\C-f\M-\C-m" C-S-up
398 ;;; "\M-[\C-f\M-\C-q" C-S-down
399 ;;; "\M-[\C-fs" C-S-left
400 ;;; "\M-[\C-ft" C-S-right
402 ;;; "\M-[\C-fw" C-S-home
403 ;;; "\M-[\C-b\C-o" S-tab
404 ;;; "\M-[\C-f\M-\C-r" C-S-insert
405 ;;; "\M-[\C-fu" C-S-end
406 ;;; "\M-[\C-f\M-\C-s" C-S-delete
407 ;;; "\M-[\C-f\M-\C-d" C-S-prior
408 ;;; "\M-[\C-fv" C-S-next
410 ;;; "\M-[\C-f^" C-S-f1
411 ;;; "\M-[\C-f_" C-S-f2
412 ;;; "\M-[\C-f`" C-S-f3
413 ;;; "\M-[\C-fa" C-S-f4
414 ;;; "\M-[\C-fb" C-S-f5
415 ;;; "\M-[\C-fc" C-S-f6
416 ;;; "\M-[\C-fd" C-S-f7
417 ;;; "\M-[\C-fe" C-S-f8
418 ;;; "\M-[\C-ff" C-S-f9
419 ;;; "\M-[\C-fg" C-S-f10
422 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "up") 'vcursor-previous-line
)
423 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "down") 'vcursor-next-line
)
424 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "left") 'vcursor-backward-char
)
425 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "right") 'vcursor-forward-char
)
427 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "return") 'vcursor-disable
)
428 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "insert") 'vcursor-copy
)
429 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "delete") 'vcursor-copy-word
)
430 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "remove") 'vcursor-copy-word
)
431 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "tab") 'vcursor-toggle-copy
)
432 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "backtab") 'vcursor-toggle-copy
)
433 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "home") 'vcursor-beginning-of-buffer
)
434 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "up" t
) 'vcursor-beginning-of-buffer
)
435 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "end") 'vcursor-end-of-buffer
)
436 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "down" t
) 'vcursor-end-of-buffer
)
437 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "prior") 'vcursor-scroll-down
)
438 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "next") 'vcursor-scroll-up
)
440 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "f6") 'vcursor-other-window
)
441 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "f7") 'vcursor-goto
)
443 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "select")
444 'vcursor-swap-point
) ; DEC keyboards
445 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "tab" t
) 'vcursor-swap-point
)
447 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "find")
448 'vcursor-isearch-forward
) ; DEC keyboards
449 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "f8") 'vcursor-isearch-forward
)
451 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "left" t
) 'vcursor-beginning-of-line
)
452 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "right" t
) 'vcursor-end-of-line
)
454 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "prior" t
) 'vcursor-backward-word
)
455 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "next" t
) 'vcursor-forward-word
)
457 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "return" t
) 'vcursor-copy-line
)
459 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "f9") 'vcursor-execute-key
)
460 (global-set-key (vcursor-cs-binding "f10") 'vcursor-execute-command
)
463 (defcustom vcursor-key-bindings nil
464 "How to bind keys when vcursor is loaded.
465 If t, guess; if `xterm', use bindings suitable for an X terminal; if
466 `oemacs', use bindings which work on a PC with Oemacs. If nil, don't
467 define any key bindings.
470 :type
'(choice (const t
) (const nil
) (const xterm
) (const oemacs
))
472 :set
'vcursor-bind-keys
475 (defcustom vcursor-interpret-input nil
476 "If non-nil, input from the vcursor is treated as interactive input.
477 This will cause text insertion to be much slower. Note that no special
478 interpretation of strings is done: \"\C-x\" is a string of four
479 characters. The default is simply to copy strings."
484 (defcustom vcursor-string
"**>"
485 "String used to show the vcursor position on dumb terminals."
490 (defvar vcursor-overlay nil
491 "Overlay for the virtual cursor.
492 It is nil if that is not enabled.")
494 (defvar vcursor-window nil
495 "Last window to have displayed the virtual cursor.
496 See the function `vcursor-find-window' for how this is used.")
498 (defvar vcursor-last-command nil
499 "Non-nil if last command was a vcursor command.
500 The commands `vcursor-copy', `vcursor-relative-move' and the ones for
501 scrolling set this. It is used by the `vcursor-auto-disable' code.")
502 ;; could do some memq-ing with last-command instead, but this will
503 ;; automatically handle any new commands using the primitives.
505 (defcustom vcursor-copy-flag nil
506 "Non-nil means moving vcursor should copy characters moved over to point."
510 (defvar vcursor-temp-goal-column nil
511 "Keeps track of temporary goal columns for the virtual cursor.")
514 (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
515 (define-key map
"t" 'vcursor-use-vcursor-map
)
517 (define-key map
"\C-p" 'vcursor-previous-line
)
518 (define-key map
"\C-n" 'vcursor-next-line
)
519 (define-key map
"\C-b" 'vcursor-backward-char
)
520 (define-key map
"\C-f" 'vcursor-forward-char
)
522 (define-key map
"\r" 'vcursor-disable
)
523 (define-key map
" " 'vcursor-copy
)
524 (define-key map
"\C-y" 'vcursor-copy-word
)
525 (define-key map
"\C-i" 'vcursor-toggle-copy
)
526 (define-key map
"<" 'vcursor-beginning-of-buffer
)
527 (define-key map
">" 'vcursor-end-of-buffer
)
528 (define-key map
"\M-v" 'vcursor-scroll-down
)
529 (define-key map
"\C-v" 'vcursor-scroll-up
)
530 (define-key map
"o" 'vcursor-other-window
)
531 (define-key map
"g" 'vcursor-goto
)
532 (define-key map
"x" 'vcursor-swap-point
)
533 (define-key map
"\C-s" 'vcursor-isearch-forward
)
534 (define-key map
"\C-r" 'vcursor-isearch-backward
)
535 (define-key map
"\C-a" 'vcursor-beginning-of-line
)
536 (define-key map
"\C-e" 'vcursor-end-of-line
)
537 (define-key map
"\M-w" 'vcursor-forward-word
)
538 (define-key map
"\M-b" 'vcursor-backward-word
)
539 (define-key map
"\M-l" 'vcursor-copy-line
)
540 (define-key map
"c" 'vcursor-compare-windows
)
541 (define-key map
"k" 'vcursor-execute-key
)
542 (define-key map
"\M-x" 'vcursor-execute-command
)
544 "Keymap for vcursor command.")
545 ;; This seems unused, but it was done as part of define-prefix-command,
546 ;; so let's keep it for now.
547 (fset 'vcursor-map vcursor-map
)
549 ;; If vcursor-key-bindings is already set on loading, bind the keys now.
550 ;; This hybrid way of doing it retains compatibility while allowing
551 ;; customize to work smoothly.
552 (if vcursor-key-bindings
553 (vcursor-bind-keys 'vcursor-key-bindings vcursor-key-bindings
))
555 (defun vcursor-locate ()
556 "Go to the starting point of the virtual cursor.
557 If that's disabled, don't go anywhere but don't complain."
558 ;; This is where we go off-mass-shell. Assume there is a
559 ;; save-excursion to get us back to the pole, er, point.
561 (and (overlayp vcursor-overlay
)
562 (overlay-buffer vcursor-overlay
)
563 (set-buffer (overlay-buffer vcursor-overlay
))
564 (goto-char (overlay-start vcursor-overlay
)))
567 (defun vcursor-find-window (&optional not-this new-win this-frame
)
568 "Return a suitable window for displaying the virtual cursor.
569 This is the first window in cyclic order where the vcursor is visible.
571 With optional NOT-THIS non-nil never return the current window.
573 With NEW-WIN non-nil, display the virtual cursor buffer in another
574 window if the virtual cursor is not currently visible \(note, however,
575 that this function never changes `window-point'\).
577 With THIS-FRAME non-nil, don't search other frames for a new window
578 \(though if the vcursor is already off-frame then its current window is
579 always considered, and the value of `pop-up-frames' is always respected\).
581 Returns nil if the virtual cursor is not visible anywhere suitable.
582 Set `vcursor-window' to the returned value as a side effect."
584 ;; The order of priorities (respecting NOT-THIS) is (1)
585 ;; vcursor-window if the virtual cursor is visible there (2) any
586 ;; window displaying the virtual cursor (3) vcursor-window provided
587 ;; it is still displaying the buffer containing the virtual cursor and
588 ;; is not selected (4) any unselected window displaying the vcursor
589 ;; buffer (5) with NEW-WIN, a window selected by display-buffer (so
590 ;; the variables pop-up-windows and pop-up-frames are significant)
593 (let ((thiswin (selected-window)) winok winbuf
)
596 (or (and (window-live-p vcursor-window
)
597 (eq (current-buffer) (window-buffer vcursor-window
))
598 (not (and not-this
(eq thiswin vcursor-window
))))
599 (setq vcursor-window nil
))
600 (or (and vcursor-window
; choice 1
601 (pos-visible-in-window-p (point) vcursor-window
))
607 (eq (current-buffer) (window-buffer win
))
608 (not (and not-this
(eq thiswin win
)))
610 ((pos-visible-in-window-p (point) win
) (setq winok win
))
612 ((not winbuf
) (setq winbuf win
))))))
613 nil
(not this-frame
))
617 ((and vcursor-window
; choice 3
618 (not (eq thiswin vcursor-window
))) vcursor-window
)
620 (new-win (display-buffer (current-buffer) t
)) ; choice 5
621 (t nil
))))))) ; default (choice 6)
625 (defun vcursor-toggle-copy (&optional arg nomsg
)
626 "Toggle copying to point when the vcursor is moved.
627 With a prefix ARG, turn on if non-negative, off if negative.
628 Display a message unless optional NOMSG is non-nil."
630 (setq vcursor-copy-flag
631 (cond ((not arg
) (not vcursor-copy-flag
))
632 ((< (prefix-numeric-value arg
) 0) nil
)
634 vcursor-last-command t
)
635 (or nomsg
(message "Copying from the vcursor is now %s."
636 (if vcursor-copy-flag
"on" "off")))
639 (defun vcursor-move (pt &optional leave-b leave-w
)
640 "Move the virtual cursor to the character to the right of PT.
641 PT is an absolute location in the current buffer. With optional
642 LEAVE-B, PT is in the same buffer the vcursor is currently in.
644 If the new virtual cursor location would not be visible, display it in
645 another window. With LEAVE-W, use the current `vcursor-window'."
646 ;; this works even if we're on-mass-shell, but usually we won't be.
649 (and leave-b
(vcursor-check t
)
650 (set-buffer (overlay-buffer vcursor-overlay
)))
651 (if (eq pt
(point-max))
653 (if (vcursor-check t
)
654 (move-overlay vcursor-overlay pt
(+ pt
1) (current-buffer))
655 (setq vcursor-overlay
(make-overlay pt
(+ pt
1)))
658 (overlay-put vcursor-overlay
'before-string vcursor-string
))
659 (overlay-put vcursor-overlay
'face
'vcursor
)
660 ;; 200 is purely an arbitrary "high" number. See bug#9663.
661 (overlay-put vcursor-overlay
'priority
200))
662 (or leave-w
(vcursor-find-window nil t
))
663 ;; vcursor-window now contains the right buffer
664 (or (pos-visible-in-window-p pt vcursor-window
)
665 (set-window-point vcursor-window pt
))))
667 (defun vcursor-insert (text)
668 "Insert TEXT, respecting `vcursor-interpret-input'."
669 (if vcursor-interpret-input
670 (setq unread-command-events
671 (append (listify-key-sequence text
) unread-command-events
))
675 (defun vcursor-relative-move (func &rest args
)
676 "Call FUNC with arbitrary ARGS ... to move the virtual cursor.
678 This is called by most of the virtual-cursor motion commands."
682 (setq opoint
(point))
684 (and (eq opoint
(point-max)) (eq opoint
(point))
685 (signal 'end-of-buffer nil
))
686 (vcursor-move (point))
687 (if vcursor-copy-flag
(setq text
(buffer-substring opoint
(point)))))
688 (if text
(vcursor-insert text
)))
689 (setq vcursor-last-command t
)
692 (defun vcursor-goto (&optional arg
)
693 "Move the real cursor to the virtual cursor position.
694 If the virtual cursor is (or was recently) visible in another window,
695 switch to that first. Without a prefix ARG, disable the virtual
699 (and (vcursor-find-window) (select-window vcursor-window
))
700 (let ((buf (and vcursor-overlay
(overlay-buffer vcursor-overlay
))))
701 (and buf
(not (eq (current-buffer) buf
)) (switch-to-buffer buf
)))
703 (or arg
(vcursor-disable))
706 (defun vcursor-swap-point ()
707 "Swap the location of point and that of the virtual cursor.
709 The virtual cursor window becomes the selected window and the old
710 window becomes the virtual cursor window. If the virtual cursor would
711 not be visible otherwise, display it in another window."
714 (let ((buf (current-buffer)) (here (point)) (win (selected-window)))
715 (vcursor-goto) ; will disable the vcursor
716 (with-current-buffer buf
717 (setq vcursor-window win
)
718 (vcursor-move here
)))
721 (defun vcursor-scroll-up (&optional n
)
722 "Scroll up the vcursor window ARG lines or near full screen if none.
723 The vcursor will always appear in an unselected window."
726 (vcursor-window-funcall 'scroll-up n
)
729 (defun vcursor-scroll-down (&optional n
)
730 "Scroll down the vcursor window ARG lines or near full screen if none.
731 The vcursor will always appear in an unselected window."
734 (vcursor-window-funcall 'scroll-down n
)
737 (defun vcursor-isearch-forward (&optional rep norecurs
)
738 "Perform forward incremental search in the virtual cursor window.
739 The virtual cursor is moved to the resulting point; the ordinary
740 cursor stays where it was."
743 (vcursor-window-funcall 'isearch-forward rep norecurs
)
746 (defun vcursor-isearch-backward (&optional rep norecurs
)
747 "Perform backward incremental search in the virtual cursor window.
748 The virtual cursor is moved to the resulting point; the ordinary
749 cursor stays where it was."
752 (vcursor-window-funcall 'isearch-backward rep norecurs
)
755 (defun vcursor-window-funcall (func &rest args
)
756 "Call FUNC with ARGS ... in a virtual cursor window.
757 A window other than the currently-selected one will always be used.
758 The virtual cursor is moved to the value of point when the function
761 If FUNC is a list, call the car of the list interactively, ignoring
762 ARGS. In this case, a new window will not be created if the vcursor
763 is visible in the current one."
764 ;; that's to avoid messing up compatibility with old versions
765 ;; by introducing a new argument, which would have to come before ARGS.
767 (vcursor-find-window (not (and (listp func
) (vcursor-check t
))) t
)
769 (let ((sw (selected-window)) text
)
770 ;; We can't use save-window-excursion because that would restore
771 ;; the original display in the window we may want to alter.
773 (let ((here (point)))
774 (select-window vcursor-window
)
777 (call-interactively (car func
))
779 (setq vcursor-window
(selected-window))
780 (and vcursor-copy-flag
781 (eq (current-buffer) (overlay-buffer vcursor-overlay
))
782 (setq text
(buffer-substring here
(point))))
783 ;; vcursor-window and the current buffer are definitely
784 ;; right, so make sure vcursor-move doesn't pick others.
785 (vcursor-move (point) nil t
))
787 (if text
(vcursor-insert text
))))
788 (setq vcursor-last-command t
)
791 (defun vcursor-get-char-count (func &rest args
)
792 "Apply FUNC to ARGS ... and return the number of characters moved.
793 Point is temporarily set to the virtual cursor position before FUNC
796 This is called by most of the virtual-cursor copying commands to find
797 out how much to copy."
800 (with-current-buffer (overlay-buffer vcursor-overlay
)
801 (let ((start (goto-char (overlay-start vcursor-overlay
))))
802 (- (progn (apply func args
) (point)) start
)))
805 ;; Make sure the virtual cursor is active. Unless arg is non-nil,
806 ;; report an error if it is not.
807 (defun vcursor-check (&optional arg
)
809 ((and (overlayp vcursor-overlay
) (overlay-start vcursor-overlay
))
812 (t (error "The virtual cursor is not active now")))
815 (define-minor-mode vcursor-use-vcursor-map
816 "Toggle the state of the vcursor key map.
817 With a prefix argument ARG, enable it if ARG is positive, and disable
818 it otherwise. If called from Lisp, enable it if ARG is omitted or nil.
819 When on, the keys defined in it are mapped directly on top of the main
820 keymap, allowing you to move the vcursor with ordinary motion keys.
821 An indication \"!VC\" appears in the mode list. The effect is
822 local to the current buffer.
823 Disabling the vcursor automatically turns this off."
827 (defun vcursor-disable (&optional arg
)
828 "Disable the virtual cursor.
829 Next time you use it, it will start from point.
831 With a positive prefix ARG, the first window in cyclic order
832 displaying the virtual cursor (or which was recently displaying the
833 virtual cursor) will be deleted unless it's the selected window.
835 With a negative prefix argument, enable the virtual cursor: make it
836 active at the same point as the real cursor.
838 Copying mode is always turned off: the next use of the vcursor will
839 not copy text until you turn it on again."
842 (if (overlayp vcursor-overlay
)
844 (delete-overlay vcursor-overlay
)
845 (setq vcursor-overlay nil
)))
847 ((not (vcursor-find-window t
)))
848 ((or (not arg
) (< (prefix-numeric-value arg
) 0)))
849 ((delete-window vcursor-window
)))
851 ((and arg
(< (prefix-numeric-value arg
) 0))
852 (vcursor-move (point))
853 (setq vcursor-window
(selected-window)))
854 (vcursor-use-vcursor-map (vcursor-use-vcursor-map 0)))
855 (setq vcursor-copy-flag nil
)
858 (defun vcursor-other-window (n &optional all-frames
)
859 "Activate the virtual cursor in another window.
860 This is the next window cyclically after one currently showing the
861 virtual cursor, or else after the current selected window. If there
862 is no other window, the current window is split.
864 Arguments N and optional ALL-FRAMES are the same as with `other-window'.
865 ALL-FRAMES is also used to decide whether to split the window."
868 (if (if (fboundp 'oemacs-version
)
870 (one-window-p nil all-frames
))
871 (display-buffer (current-buffer) t
))
873 (save-window-excursion
874 ;; We don't use fancy vcursor-find-window trickery, since we're
875 ;; quite happy to have the vcursor cycle back into the current
877 (let ((win (vcursor-find-window nil nil
(not all-frames
))))
878 (if win
(select-window win
))
879 ;; else start from here
880 (other-window n all-frames
)
881 (vcursor-disable -
1))))
884 (declare-function compare-windows-skip-whitespace
"compare-w" (start))
886 ;; vcursor-compare-windows is copied from compare-w.el with only
887 ;; minor modifications; these are too bound up with the function
888 ;; to make it really useful to call compare-windows itself.
889 (defun vcursor-compare-windows (&optional ignore-whitespace
)
890 "Compare text in current window with text in window with vcursor.
891 Compares the text starting at point in the current window and at the
892 vcursor position in the other window, moving over text in each one as
895 A prefix argument, if any, means ignore changes in whitespace.
896 The variable `compare-windows-whitespace' controls how whitespace is skipped.
897 If `compare-ignore-case' is non-nil, changes in case are also ignored."
899 ;; (vcursor-window-funcall 'compare-windows arg)
901 (let* (p1 p2 maxp1 maxp2 b1 b2 w2
905 (skip-whitespace (if ignore-whitespace
906 compare-windows-whitespace
)))
907 (setq p1
(point) b1
(current-buffer))
908 (setq w2
(vcursor-find-window t t
))
909 (if (or (eq w2
(selected-window)) (not w2
))
910 (error "No other window with vcursor"))
913 (setq p2
(point) b2
(current-buffer)))
915 (setq maxp1
(point-max))
916 (with-current-buffer b2
917 (setq maxp2
(point-max)))
922 ;; if interrupted, show how far we've gotten
926 ;; If both buffers have whitespace next to point,
927 ;; optionally skip over it.
931 (let (p1a p2a result1 result2
)
933 (if (stringp skip-whitespace
)
934 (compare-windows-skip-whitespace opoint1
)
935 (funcall skip-whitespace opoint1
)))
940 (if (stringp skip-whitespace
)
941 (compare-windows-skip-whitespace opoint2
)
942 (funcall skip-whitespace opoint2
)))
944 (if (or (stringp skip-whitespace
)
945 (and result1 result2
(eq result1 result2
)))
949 ;; Try advancing comparing 1000 chars at a time.
950 ;; When that fails, go 500 chars at a time, and so on.
953 (case-fold-search compare-ignore-case
))
956 ;; Try comparing SIZE chars at a time, repeatedly, till that fails.
958 (setq size
(min size
(- maxp1 p1
) (- maxp2 p2
)))
961 (= 0 (compare-buffer-substrings b2 p2
(+ size p2
)
962 b1 p1
(+ size p1
)))))
964 (setq p1
(+ p1 size
) p2
(+ p2 size
)
966 ;; If SIZE chars don't match, try fewer.
967 (setq size
(/ size
2)))))
971 (if (= (point) opoint1
)
975 (defun vcursor-next-line (arg)
976 "Move the virtual cursor forward ARG lines."
977 ;; This is next-line rewritten for the vcursor. Maybe it would
978 ;; be easier simply to rewrite line-move.
980 (let (temporary-goal-column opoint text
)
983 (setq temporary-goal-column
984 (if (or (eq last-command
'vcursor-next-line
)
985 (eq last-command
'vcursor-previous-line
))
987 (setq last-command
'next-line
) ; trick line-move
988 vcursor-temp-goal-column
)
989 (if (and track-eol
(eolp)
990 (or (not (bolp)) (eq last-command
'end-of-line
)))
995 (and (eq opoint
(point-max)) (eq opoint
(point))
996 (signal 'end-of-buffer nil
))
997 (if vcursor-copy-flag
(setq text
(buffer-substring opoint
(point))))
998 (vcursor-move (point))
999 (setq vcursor-temp-goal-column temporary-goal-column
1000 vcursor-last-command t
))
1001 (if text
(vcursor-insert text
)))
1004 (defun vcursor-previous-line (arg)
1005 "Move the virtual cursor back ARG lines."
1007 (vcursor-next-line (- arg
))
1010 (defun vcursor-forward-char (arg)
1011 "Move the virtual cursor forward ARG characters."
1013 (vcursor-relative-move 'forward-char arg
)
1016 (defun vcursor-backward-char (arg)
1017 "Move the virtual cursor backward ARG characters."
1019 (vcursor-relative-move 'backward-char arg
)
1022 (defun vcursor-forward-word (arg)
1023 "Move the virtual cursor forward ARG words."
1025 (vcursor-relative-move 'forward-word arg
)
1028 (defun vcursor-backward-word (arg)
1029 "Move the virtual cursor backward ARG words."
1031 (vcursor-relative-move 'backward-word arg
)
1034 (defun vcursor-beginning-of-line (arg)
1035 "Move the virtual cursor to beginning of its current line.
1036 ARG is as for `beginning-of-line'."
1038 (vcursor-relative-move 'beginning-of-line
1039 (if arg
(prefix-numeric-value arg
)))
1042 (defun vcursor-end-of-line (arg)
1043 "Move the virtual cursor to end of its current line.
1044 ARG is as for `end-of-line'."
1046 (vcursor-relative-move 'end-of-line
1047 (if arg
(prefix-numeric-value arg
)))
1050 (defun vcursor-beginning-of-buffer (&optional arg
)
1051 "Move the virtual cursor to the beginning of its buffer.
1052 ARG is as for `beginning-of-buffer'."
1054 (vcursor-relative-move
1056 (goto-char (if arg
(/ (* arg
(- (point-max) (point-min))) 10)
1058 (if arg
(prefix-numeric-value arg
)))
1061 (defun vcursor-end-of-buffer (&optional arg
)
1062 "Move the virtual cursor to the end of its buffer.
1063 ARG is as for `end-of-buffer'.
1065 Actually, the vcursor is moved to the second from last character or it
1066 would be invisible."
1068 (vcursor-relative-move
1070 (goto-char (if arg
(- (point-max)
1071 (/ (* arg
(- (point-max) (point-min))) 10))
1073 (if arg
(prefix-numeric-value arg
)))
1076 (defun vcursor-execute-command (cmd)
1077 "Execute COMMAND for the virtual cursor.
1078 COMMAND is called interactively. Not all commands (in fact, only a
1079 small subset) are useful."
1080 (interactive "CCommand: ")
1081 (vcursor-window-funcall (list cmd
))
1084 (defun vcursor-execute-key ()
1085 "Read a key sequence and execute the bound command for the virtual cursor.
1086 The key sequence is read at the vcursor location. The command found
1087 is called interactively, so prefix argument etc. are usable."
1091 ;; We'd like to avoid the display changing when we locate
1092 ;; to the vcursor position and read a key sequence.
1093 (vcursor-find-window (not (vcursor-check t
)) t
)
1094 (save-window-excursion
1095 (select-window vcursor-window
)
1097 (setq cmd
(key-binding (read-key-sequence "Key sequence: ")))))
1098 (vcursor-window-funcall (list cmd
)))
1101 (defun vcursor-copy (arg)
1102 "Copy ARG characters from the virtual cursor position to point."
1106 (with-current-buffer (overlay-buffer vcursor-overlay
)
1107 (let* ((ostart (overlay-start vcursor-overlay
))
1108 (end (+ ostart arg
)))
1110 (buffer-substring ostart end
)
1111 (vcursor-move end
)))))
1112 (setq vcursor-last-command t
)
1115 (defun vcursor-copy-word (arg)
1116 "Copy ARG words from the virtual cursor position to point."
1118 (vcursor-copy (vcursor-get-char-count 'forward-word arg
))
1121 (defun vcursor-copy-line (arg)
1122 "Copy up to ARGth line after virtual cursor position.
1123 With no argument, copy to the end of the current line.
1125 Behavior with regard to newlines is similar (but not identical) to
1126 `kill-line'; the main difference is that whitespace at the end of the
1127 line is treated like ordinary characters."
1130 (let* ((num (prefix-numeric-value arg
))
1131 (count (vcursor-get-char-count 'end-of-line num
)))
1132 (vcursor-copy (if (or (= count
0) arg
) (1+ count
) count
)))
1135 (define-obsolete-function-alias
1136 'vcursor-toggle-vcursor-map
'vcursor-use-vcursor-map
"23.1")
1138 (defun vcursor-post-command ()
1139 (and vcursor-auto-disable
(not vcursor-last-command
)
1141 (if (eq vcursor-auto-disable t
)
1143 (vcursor-toggle-copy -
1 t
)))
1144 (setq vcursor-last-command nil
)
1147 (add-hook 'post-command-hook
'vcursor-post-command
)
1151 ;;; vcursor.el ends here